
The Divorce Rehearsal
The Divorce Rehearsal Chapter 1
July in Los Angeles was always punishing, but today the heat felt particularly oppressive. Sweat gathered at the nape of my neck as I carefully arranged Julian's favorite lunch—grilled salmon with quinoa and roasted vegetables—in the wicker basket. My fingers trembled slightly, betraying the anxiety beneath my composed exterior.
It had been weeks since Julian and I had shared a meal together. His law firm was handling a high-profile corporate merger, which meant late nights and missed dinners. At least, that's what he told me.
"This will be a nice surprise," I whispered to myself, smoothing down the front of my cream silk blouse. The mirror reflected a woman trying too hard—perfect makeup, carefully styled hair, a practiced smile that didn't quite reach her eyes.
I drove through Beverly Hills with the windows down, the hot wind whipping strands of hair across my face. The lunch basket sat on the passenger seat, a peace offering to a war I wasn't sure I was fighting.
Julian's office occupied the top floor of a sleek high-rise in Century City. I'd visited enough times that the security guards knew me by name.
"Mrs. Hartley," the receptionist greeted me with a tight smile that held something I couldn't quite identify. Pity? Discomfort? "Mr. Hartley isn't in today."
"Oh?" I clutched the basket tighter. "He didn't mention any meetings outside the office."
Kara, Julian's assistant, appeared from around the corner. Her eyes flicked to the basket, then to my face. Something cold and knowing passed across her features.
"Julian is in an important meeting at the Langham Hotel," she said, her voice clipped and professional. "Presidential suite. Very urgent client matter."
Something in her tone made my stomach tighten. The way she said his name—Julian, not Mr. Hartley—carried an intimacy that scraped against my nerves.
"Thank you, Kara," I said, keeping my voice neutral despite the unease spreading through me. "I'll just surprise him there, then."
A flicker of alarm crossed her face, so brief I almost missed it. "I wouldn't recommend interrupting. It's a sensitive negotiation."
"I'll be discreet," I promised, already turning toward the elevator.
The drive to the Langham Hotel passed in a blur of palm trees and luxury storefronts. The presidential suite key card burned in my purse—Julian had given it to me months ago when he'd booked the suite for our anniversary, a weekend that ended with him being called away for work after just one night.
The elevator ascended silently to the top floor. My heart pounded against my ribs, a dancer's rhythm gone erratic. I told myself I was being paranoid, that years of ballet had trained me to anticipate disaster before every performance. Julian was in a meeting. That was all.
I slid the key card into the lock. The light flashed green.
The first thing that hit me was the smell—sweat and sex and the faint, cloying scent of Kara's signature perfume. Then came the sounds—a woman's laugh, low and satisfied, followed by Julian's deeper murmur.
My body moved on autopilot, carrying me through the foyer and into the bedroom doorway. The lunch basket dangled from suddenly numb fingers.
They didn't notice me at first. Julian lay sprawled across the rumpled sheets, gloriously naked and completely at ease. Kara was curled against him, her dark hair spilling across his chest, her hand tracing patterns on his stomach.
The sunlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows caught something on her wrist—a flash of diamonds and platinum that I recognized instantly. The Cartier bracelet Julian had given me on our second wedding anniversary.
"You're wearing my bracelet," I said, my voice sounding distant and strange to my own ears.
They both looked up, startled. Kara's expression shifted quickly from shock to something like triumph, while Julian's face remained perfectly, terrifyingly blank.
He didn't scramble to cover himself. Didn't apologize. Didn't even look surprised.
"Emilia," he said, as if greeting me at a dinner party. "You should have called first."
The basket slipped from my fingers, hitting the plush carpet with a soft thud. Salmon and quinoa spilled across the floor, a mess of good intentions.
"I wanted to surprise you," I said, hating how small my voice sounded.
Julian sat up slowly, not bothering to cover himself. Kara draped the sheet across her body with deliberate casualness, the bracelet—my bracelet—glinting obscenely on her wrist.
"Well," Julian said, his voice cool and measured, "consider me surprised."
Kara smiled, a predator's smile. "I should give you two some privacy," she murmured, but made no move to leave.
"Stay," Julian told her, his hand possessively covering hers. Then, to me: "You've interrupted our afternoon, Emilia. What did you expect to accomplish with this... domestic gesture?" He nodded toward the spilled lunch.
"I expected my husband to be at work," I said, finding my voice at last. "Not in bed with his assistant."
Julian sighed, as if I were a particularly dense client failing to grasp a simple legal concept. "You early on stopped being worth my expectations, Emilia. Did you think I wouldn't notice how emotionally frigid you've become? How you've withdrawn into yourself?"
Each word landed like a physical blow. I felt myself shrinking, folding inward as I had been taught to do through years of ballet—contain the pain, maintain the pose, never let them see you break.
"I've been trying," I whispered, hating the pleading note in my voice. "My knee—"
"Your knee, your career, your depression," Julian cut in. "Always excuses. Let's be honest with each other, finally. Our marriage has always been about mutual convenience. You needed security after your career ended. I needed a beautiful, cultured wife for my image. It was a transaction, not a love story."
The casual cruelty of his words stole my breath. I looked at Kara, at the bracelet on her wrist that Julian had once placed on mine with whispered promises of forever.
"I want a divorce," I said, the words escaping before I could stop them.
Julian's laugh was soft and dangerous. "No, you don't."
"You can't stop me."
"Can't I?" He stood, magnificent and terrible in his nakedness. "I control our finances. I control the narrative. One word from me, and every media outlet in this city will paint you as an unstable, bitter woman who couldn't handle her husband's success. The emotionally damaged ex-ballerina who couldn't cope when the spotlight moved on."
He stepped closer, his voice dropping to a silky whisper. "What do you have, Emilia? A ruined knee. No career. No money of your own. Do you really want to see what happens when you have no name, either?"
I stood frozen, a lifetime of discipline keeping me upright when all I wanted was to crumble.
"You're nothing without me," Julian continued, his eyes cold. "Remember that before you threaten me again."
Kara watched from the bed, the Cartier bracelet catching the light as she adjusted the sheet around her. Her smile told me everything—she had won, and she knew it.
I backed away, dignity the only thing I had left to preserve. Julian's words followed me, wrapping around my throat like a noose.
"Oh, and Emilia? Don't bother coming home tonight. I think we both need space to... reconsider our positions."
The hotel room door closed behind me with a soft, final click. In the mirrored elevator, I watched a stranger's reflection—a woman with perfect posture and empty eyes, a dancer trained to smile through pain.
But beneath the numbness, something else stirred. Something that had been dormant for too long. As the elevator descended, I made a silent vow: Julian was wrong. I wasn't nothing.
And I would make damn sure he remembered that.
The Divorce Rehearsal of Contents
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